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Huey long by t harry williams
Huey long by t harry williams







huey long by t harry williams

"It's no secret that I am a great believer in oral history,” wrote Williams. In the decade that followed the publication of Huey Long, the idea of taped recollections gained acceptance. Lugging a thirty-pound Webster Electric Ekotape reel-to-reel tape recorder, Williams tracked down and talked to some 295 persons, both pro- and anti-Long, during the dozen years he worked on the book.Įach interview had to be transcribed, a task that often fell to Williams’s wife Estelle, who taught English at LSU.Įxhaustively researched and crisply written, the Long book pioneered the use of oral history. But all his previous works were eclipsed by Huey Long, published in 1969 and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for biography and the National Book Award for history and biography.īut all his previous works were eclipsed by Huey Long, published in 1969 and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for biography and the National Book Award for history and biography.Įxhaustively researched and crisply written, the Long book pioneered the use of oral history. His 1952 study Lincoln and His Generals was a Book of the Month Club selection. In addition to teaching, Williams was widely published and well reviewed. … He had that gorgeous sense of humor that would just crack you up … He was so captivating that he didn’t have to work hard to hold your attention, really.” In a taped interview, Byrd recalled, “He was very informal in his attire as well as his manner, but he was very structured. “He was just so natural,” said Winnie Byrd, a student in the 1940s. Those who were not so lucky often gathered in the hallway outside the classroom, straining to catch the words as they fell from his lips. Students arranged their schedules around his classes on the Civil War and southern history. It wasn’t easy getting into a course taught by T. “He knew what he wanted to say, and he said it without missing a beat.” “Williams would engage his auditors with rapid-fire volleys in a conversational voice off the cuff without lectern, text, or notes,” recalled student Harold McSween. He was a Boyd Professor by 1953, and way before that he had students practically fighting to get into his classes. Williams had it all-meticulous attention to detail merged with the soul of a raconteur. A slight, balding, bespectacled man who puffed on a pipe, he nonetheless mesmerized students with his dramatic and witty accounts of moments long past. Harry Williams, who brought unaccustomed excitement to the history department from 1941 until 1979. If ever there was a legendary teacher at LSU, it was T. Williams, shown here with Senator Russell Long, used oral histories for his biography of Huey Long (seen in photograph).









Huey long by t harry williams